Hyundai is using the 2013 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas to demonstrate the goods it has in the works for its next-generation infotainment platform. The automaker currently offers touch-screen infotainment systems and its Blue Link telematics software, and it seems both are in for a few key improvements.

Starting with Hyundai’s next-gen infotainment hardware, the company says it will incorporate a high-resolution, multi-touch screen; Wi-Fi and 3G data connectivity; web browsing and mobile hotspot capabilities; and media streaming via apps like Aha and Pandora. Oh, and Bluetooth will again make an appearance—version 3.0—and form the core of the system’s ability to play nice with mobile devices. Backing up the new, sharper screen will be Mobile High-Definition Link (MHL), which will allow customers to route video at resolutions up to 1080p and with as many as eight channels of digital sound to the display, presumably when the car is parked.

Hyundai also is looking to improve the hands-free aspects of the man-machine interface, and is working to integrate Apple’s Siri digital assistant and improved voice recognition into its infotainment suite. Siri phone control and assistance will come by way of Apple’s Eyes Free car-integration technology, while natural-voice recognition comes courtesy of Hyundai’s existing partner in this arena, Nuance. That company’s latest Dragon Drive voice services platform will form the basis for Hyundai’s latest in-car systems, as well as the automaker’s Blue Link telematics suite, allowing more conversational interactions with in-car tech.